According to a recent survey of over 3,000 business owners, the future of work may not require office plans. More than half (57%) of millennials surveyed plan to at least double their spending on online workers in 2013, while 82% believe within the next 10 years many businesses will be built completely with virtual teams of online workers.

“Younger workers don’t want to limit themselves to commuting and cubes,” says Michael Haaren, cofounder and CEO of jobs website Rat Race Rebellion and coauthor of Work at Home Now. “Several trends support the prediction that working from anywhere will soon be the new norm.”

More companies are ramping up their hiring of anywhere workers who don’t need to come into or even be near the corporate office. Haaren says businesses like American Express, Amazon, United Health and Aetna are some of many realizing that hiring more virtual workers gives them access to millions of potential candidates rather than the hundred or so within a 50-mile radius. It also saves businesses on commercial real estate costs and reduces turnover, as workers become ironically loyal when offered their freedom.

Some forward-thinking businesses are beginning to innovate around the idea of anywhere work. Coworking centers are sprouting up across the country to offer freelancers, road warriors, entrepreneurs and home-office workers the option to rent an office for the day, week or however long they need it, in whatever city they’re in at the time.

The idea has even roused a few deep-pocketed investors. Through his investment firm Revolution, AOL founder Steve Case backed startup Loosecubes in March, which matches virtual workers with companies that have free desk space. Meanwhile, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos and Starbucks’ Howard Schultz are two of the many big names helping fund General Assembly, a global network of coworking campuses with a sprawling, 20,000-square-foot space in New York, NY.

One day, anywhere workers may also be able to work from the road. Literally. Haaren points to new WiFi-equipped Ford, Chevrolet and Mercedes models, which turn cars into internet hotspots on wheels. If Google’s self-driving “robot car” takes hold, he envisions a future of “rolling workstations.”

So where are these high-paying virtual jobs that can be done anywhere from your couch to your local coffee shop?

Many of the best-paying are concentrated in health care. Increasingly, health-care professionals are being hired by hospitals and insurance companies to consult or assist remotely. Teleradiologists, for example, view digitally transmitted patient images and confer with the primary doctor via videoconferencing. As one of the highest paid medical specialties, they can make anywhere from $100,000 to $400,000 annually, depending on experience level and hours worked. Haaren says companies like Virtual Radiologic, Imaging on Call and Radiology 24/7 are some of the many now employing them.